Julian Symons
Hoffmann-La Roche
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Featured researches published by Julian Symons.
Antiviral Research | 2010
Stanley M. Lemon; Jane A. McKeating; Thomas Pietschmann; David N. Frick; Jeffrey S. Glenn; Timothy L. Tellinghuisen; Julian Symons; Phillip A. Furman
The current standard of care for the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a combination of pegylated IFN and ribavirin (Peg-IFN/RBV). Because of the adverse effects associated with both IFN and ribavirin and because Peg-IFN/RBV provides only about a 45-50% sustained virological response (SVR, undetectable HCV RNA for greater than 24 weeks after cessation of therapy) in genotype 1-infected individuals, there is a need for more potent anti-HCV compounds with fewer adverse effects. The twenty-first International Conference on Antiviral Research held in May 2009 in Miami Beach, Florida, featured a special session focused on novel targets for HCV therapy. The session included presentations by world-renowned experts in HCV virology and covered a diverse array of potential targets for the development of new classes of HCV therapies. This review contains concise summaries of discussed topics that included the innate immune response, virus entry, the NS2 protease, the NS3 helicase, NS4B, and NS5A. Each presenter discussed the current knowledge of these targets and provided examples of recent scientific breakthroughs that are enhancing our understanding of these targets. As our understanding of the role of these novel anti-HCV targets increases so will our ability to discover new, more safe and effective anti-HCV therapies.
Journal of General Virology | 2009
Pong Kian Chua; Matthew F. McCown; Sonal Rajyaguru; Simran Kular; Ram Varma; Julian Symons; Sophie Chiu; Nick Cammack; Isabel Najera
ISG15 has recently been reported to possess antiviral properties against viruses, both in vivo and in vitro. Knock-down of ISG15 gene expression by small interfering RNA followed by alpha interferon (IFN-alpha) treatment in Huh-7 cells resulted in an increased phenotypic sensitivity to IFN-alpha, as determined by measuring hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA replication inhibition in stably transfected HCV replicon cells and in cells infected with genotype 1a HCVcc (infectious HCV). This IFN-alpha-specific effect, which was not observed with IFN-gamma, correlated with an increase in expression of the IFN-alpha-inducible genes IFI6, IFITM3, OAS1 and MX1, whereas the expression of the non-IFN-alpha-inducible genes PTBP-1 and JAK1 remained unchanged. It has previously been reported that, unlike ISG15 knock-down, increased sensitivity to IFN-alpha after knock-down of USP18 occurs through the prolonged phosphorylation of STAT-1. Combination knock-down of ISG15 and USP18 resulted in a moderate increase in IFN-alpha-inducible gene expression compared with single ISG15 or USP18 knock-down. Furthermore, the phenotype of increased gene expression after ISG15 knock-down and IFN-alpha treatment was also observed in non-hepatic cell lines A549 and HeLa. Taken together, these results reveal a novel function for ISG15 in the regulation of the IFN-alpha pathway and its antiviral effect.
Current Opinion in Virology | 2014
Jerome Deval; Julian Symons; Leo Beigelman
A number of important human infections are caused by positive-strand RNA viruses, yet almost none can be treated with small molecule antiviral therapeutics. One exception is the chronic infection caused by hepatitis C virus (HCV), against which new generations of potent inhibitors are being developed. One of the main molecular targets for anti-HCV drugs is the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, NS5B. This review summarizes the search for nucleoside and nucleotide analogs that inhibit HCV NS5B, which led to the FDA approval of sofosbuvir in 2013. Advances in anti-HCV therapeutics have also stimulated efforts to develop nucleoside analogs against other positive-strand RNA viruses. Although it remains to be validated in the clinic, the prospect of using nucleoside analogs to treat acute infections caused by RNA viruses represents an important paradigm shift and a new frontier for future antiviral therapies.
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2008
Sophie Le Pogam; A. Seshaadri; Alan Kosaka; Sophie Chiu; Hyunsoon Kang; Steven Hu; Sonal Rajyaguru; Julian Symons; Nick Cammack; Isabel Najera
Virology | 2006
Sophie Le Pogam; Wen-Rong Jiang; Vincent Leveque; Sonal Rajyaguru; Han Ma; Hyunsoon Kang; Sharon Jiang; Margaret Singer; Samir Ali; Klaus Klumpp; Dave Smith; Julian Symons; Nick Cammack; Isabel Najera
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2007
David Bernard Smith; Joseph A. Martin; Klaus Klumpp; Stewart J. Baker; Peter Blomgren; Rene Devos; Caroline Granycome; Julie Hang; Christopher John Hobbs; Wen-Rong Jiang; Carl Laxton; Sophie Le Pogam; Vincent Leveque; Han Ma; Graham Maile; Jh Merrett; Arkadius Pichota; Keshab Sarma; Mark Smith; Steven Swallow; Julian Symons; David Vesey; Isabel Najera; Nick Cammack
PLOS Pathogens | 2015
Jerome Deval; Jin Hong; Guangyi Wang; Josh Taylor; Lucas K. Smith; Amy Fung; Sarah K. Stevens; Hong Liu; Zhinan Jin; Natalia Dyatkina; Marija Prhavc; Antitsa Dimitrova Stoycheva; Vladimir Serebryany; Jyanwei Liu; David Bernard Smith; Yuen Tam; Qingling Zhang; Martin L. Moore; Rachel Fearns; Sushmita Chanda; Julian Symons; Leo Beigelman
Journal of Hepatology | 2008
S. Le Pogam; A. Seshaadri; Hyunsoon Kang; Alan Kosaka; Steven Hu; Julian Symons; Klaus Klumpp; Nick Cammack; Isabel Najera
Open Forum Infectious Diseases | 2014
John P. DeVincenzo; Hosnieh Fathi; Matthew Mcclure; Christopher Westland; Sushmita Chanda; Rob Lambkin-Williams; Patrick F. Smith; Lisa Harrison; Julian Symons; Cecilia Scaglioni-Weinlich; Qingling Zhang; Keith Nieforth; Leo Beigelman; Lawrence M. Blatt; John Fry
Journal of Hepatology | 2008
Vincent Leveque; S. Le Pogam; Hyunsoon Kang; Gloria Ao-Ieong; Alan Kosaka; A. Seshaadri; Julian Symons; Nick Cammack; Klaus Klumpp; Isabel Najera